Most v. Frederick Loeser & Co.

15 F. Supp. 1, 1936 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1128
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedMay 22, 1936
DocketNo. 7510
StatusPublished

This text of 15 F. Supp. 1 (Most v. Frederick Loeser & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Most v. Frederick Loeser & Co., 15 F. Supp. 1, 1936 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1128 (E.D.N.Y. 1936).

Opinion

CAMPBELL, District Judge.

This is a suit for the alleged infringement of patent No. 1,824,029 issued to Lucifer J. Most and Ralph W. Wilson for container granted September 22, 1931, on an application filed May 9, 1928.

The interest of Ralph W. Wilson was assigned to the plaintiff who has title to the letters patent in suit. No notice of infringement was given to the defendant before the commencement of this suit.

The defendant is only a dealer and this suit is defended by the manufacturer of the alleged infringing device, Majestic Metal Specialties, Inc.

The device complained of is in evidence by stipulation.

This suit is based only on claim 3 of the patent in suit.

The defendant has interposed an answer raising the issue of invalidity and noninfringement.

The device in issue is known in the trade as an “automatic” lipstick container.

The patentees in their specification say: “Our invention relates to containers suitable for cosmetics or other material capable of being fed forth and back, such for example, as lipstick or similar articles, and it is characterized by a container provided with a cover which opens automatically when the material is fed out of the container and closes when the material is retracted. Another object of the invention is to provide a container which has few parts, is simple in construction and will not get out of order.”

They further say: “In the appended drawings the container is illustrated [2]*2for the use of a lipstick but the same maybe used for soap or any other suitable material that may be fed in and out of the container.”

A lipstick is consumable and is consumed during use. So is soap. Material that is “similar” to lipstick or soap, as contemplated by the patent, is material that is consumed during use. The primary problem in providing a satisfactory “automatic” container was the difficulty presented by its consumable nature, and there were other secondary factors peculiar to the handling of such material.

The following characteristics and construction are peculiar to practical “automatic” containers for lipsticks:

1. Smallness for convenience in carrying.

2. Maximum amount of lipstick material.

3. Means for feeding the lipstick material to exposed position for use.

4. A carrier within the container of minimum length so that the lipstick within the container may be of maximum length.

5. A support for the frangible lipstick when in use adjacent its exposed end.

6. Complete inclosure of the lipstick for protection when not in use.

7. A common actuator for the carrier and for the door of the container.

8. A door opening mechanism which will move the • door a predetermined distance only, which is that distance sufficient to open the container for free move■ment of the lipstick without interference.

9. A carrier which is movable a variable distance so that the lipstick may be exposed for use as its length is reduced during use.

The construction of the patent will satisfy these requirements.

The patent discloses a structure including two separate mechanisms operable in Aimed relationship, by a single common actuator. The two mechanisms being (a) the feed for moving the carrier a variable distance and (b) the door opening device. The specification says, “The outward feed of the material and the opening of the cover are concomitant, the carrier and cover opener are -both moved longitudinally for the first quarter of their revolution.”

It then says, “For the remaining part of their revolution, the only longitudinally movable part is the carrier. * * * ”

It further says, “When the pencil is to be retracted the carrier is revolved in the proper direction and for the first three-quarter of a revolution -of the carrier the only longitudinal movement is imparted to the carrier and for the last quarter of the revolution, both the carrier and the cover are moved longitudinally. * * * ” This permits the doors to close.

In the specific embodiment of the patent the following - mechanism comprises the variable feed for the carrier, the common actuator is the rotatable tube 15 which is operated by the finger piece 23 secured thereto. The carrier 10 for the lipstick is slidably mounted within the actuator tube 15 and engaged with a longitudinal slot 14 therein by means of a pin 13. The actuator tube 15 is nested within a second tube 19 which is fixed against rotation within the case 26. The tube 19 is provided with a helical slot 20, into which extends the pin 13 of the carrier 10. Rotation of the actuator tube 15 by means of the finger piece 23 causes the carrier to rotate because the pin extends through the longitudinal slot 14. At the same time, the carrier is caused to move longitudinally because of the engagement of its pin with the helical slot in the relatively fixed tube 19. This longitudinal travel of the carrier is variable, its extent being limited only by the length of the helical slot 20.

The following mechanism. comprises the door opening device. A longitudinally slidable tube 18 whose movements outwardly and inwardly are caused by the same actuator tube 15. The door opening tube 18 is nested on the fixed tube 19, and has a pin 17, which extends through a helical slot 21 in the tube 19. The pin 17 also extends into a longitudinal slot 16 in the actuator tube 15. Rotation of the actuator causes longitudinal movement of the door opening tube 18 in the way movement of the carrier 10 is caused. The actuator being common, the initial movement of the carrier and the door opener are necessarily concomitant. Once the doors 27 are opened to an extent sufficient to permit unimpeded movement of the lipstick, it is unnecessary that the doors be moved further. The door opening device is inten[3]*3tionally caused to dwell; continued operation of tlie actuator will not and cannot cause further movement of the door opener. If this condition were not established, the movement of the carrier would be limited by the permitted movement of the doors. But as the material in containers of this character is progressively reduced in length, its travel must be variable and must be continued until substantially all is consumed.

The helical slot 20 for the carrier has a full convolution on the tube 19 while the helical slot 21 for the door opener has only a quarter of a „ convolution, and the slot 21 merges into a circular slot 22 which continues for three quarters of the circumference of the tubular member 19.

The operation is described in the patent specification as follows:

“By rotating the head 23 while holding the outer shell 26, the carrier 10 is forced by the helical slot 20 to rise. Simultaneously, the cover opener 18 is also forced to rise due to the engagement of its pin 17 with the slot of the helix 21, but after a quarter of a revolution of the actuator, the cover opener will enter the circular slot and thereafter will not move longitudinally while the carrier will continue to rise through the other three-quarter revolutions of the actuator. See Figure 3 and dash and dot outline in Figure 1.
“The first quarter revolution of the actuator is sufficient to open the covers 27 and thus provide an unobstructed passage for the cosmetic pencil secured to the carrier.

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15 F. Supp. 1, 1936 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/most-v-frederick-loeser-co-nyed-1936.